Park Predators - UPDATED: The Housewives
Episode Date: November 25, 2025In 1960, three housewives from Chicago never make it out of Starved Rock State Park alive and police in Illinois quickly realize a piece of nature itself might be the murder weapon. The investigation ...zeros in on a predator who was hiding in plain sight. In recent years, his guilt has come into question and new evidence emerged that only deepened this enduring mystery.View source material and photos for this episode at: parkpredators.com/revisited-the-housewives Park Predators is an Audiochuck production. Connect with us on social media:Instagram: @parkpredators | @audiochuckTwitter: @ParkPredators | @audiochuckFacebook: /ParkPredators | /audiochuckllcTikTok: @audiochuck Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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Hi, park enthusiasts. I'm your host, Delia Diambra. And today's case is one that I think
is a true testament to understanding just how massive an undertaking it is to investigate a
multi-victim murder. And how tricky a case can be when the suspected murder weapon is a piece
of nature. The story takes place in Starved Rock State Park in Illinois, which is home to 13 miles
of trails that loop along the Illinois River. Its unique name comes from a Native American legend that
dates back to the 1760s. The legend details the history of a bitter battle for power
between two indigenous tribes that resulted in one tribe taking refuge on a massive rock inside
of the park. The story goes that while the group was cornered by their enemies for several
days without access to food or water, they all starved to death. And thus, starved rock state park
got its name. The park is heralded as one of Illinois's most beautiful destinations, its big
attractions are canyons that feature vertical rock walls, sandstone bluffs, and access to
waterfalls. These sites are just as enchanting during the winter months as they are in the
summer and spring, because everything, including the waterfalls, freezes over and the canyons
turn into essentially ice caves. In March of 1960, a violent killer cornered three middle-aged
women near one of these scenic areas and left a bloody trail of clues that led police
straight to him. But in recent years, some have questioned if there's much more to the story
than meets the eye. The Starved Rock murders, as they're often referred to, is a case that I covered
years ago when Park Predators first came out. But just this year, new developments in court hearings
once again surged it back into the headlines. So I decided to revisit this story with
updated reporting that will likely leave you with some answers, but perhaps even more questions.
This is Park Predators.
On Monday, March 14th, 1960, a man named George Edding, sometimes pronounced
Odding, dialed the telephone number for his wife, Lillian's room, inside Starved Rock Lodge in Oglesby, Illinois.
It had only been a few hours since 50-year-old Lillian had left the.
their home in Riverside, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago, and made the hour and a half or so drive
to the park. The mother of two was on a four-day vacation with two of her friends, 47-year-old
Francis Murphy, and 50-year-old Mildred Lindquist. George was eager to hear how his wife and the other
women's road trip had gone and if they were settling in well for their stay. This was
Lillian and her friend's first trip together after what was said to be a hard and trying winter.
You see, a few months earlier, George had suffered a heart attack, and in the aftermath of that,
Lillian had been caring for him at home in addition to balancing all of her other social activities in Riverside.
So she was due for a fun getaway with her girlfriends.
According to coverage in Life magazine, all three women were very close with one another,
and they each had their hands full serving on education boards together and participating in garden and reading clubs.
All their families actively attended a Presbyterian church outside of Chicago,
where they raised their children and grandchildren.
But when George dialed his wife's room, the phone rang, and no one picked up.
According to reporting by the Chicago Tribune,
the women's plan was to spend their first day of vacation,
which was Monday, March 14th, walking the trails in Starved Rock State Park.
At the time, George was a high-ranking supervisor for Illinois Bell Telephone Company,
and he liked to make sure that he and Lillian stayed in touch whenever they were apart,
especially since he'd just had that heart attack.
According to the Daily Aligni, Francis's husband, R.W. Murphy, was a lawyer and vice president for a worldwide automotive parts supplier in Chicago.
Mildred's husband was the vice president for a large bank in the city.
According to more reporting by the Chicago Tribune, there was no question that the women had the necessary funds and supplies for their four-day getaway.
When Lillian didn't pick up on Monday afternoon, George figured that the women had probably just stayed longer in the park than they'd planned, and so the next morning, Tuesday, March 15,
he tried calling again, but no one answered.
When he phoned the number for the lodge's front desk, a staff member told him they hadn't
seen Lillian or the other two women that morning, but would send someone up to Lillian's room
to leave a note for her to call George.
According to the coverage, a bellboy for the lodge went up to the room with a card to hang
on the doorknob.
It's unclear from reports, though, what exactly the message on the paper hanger said,
but it was something to the effect of you have a message downstairs and George has been
calling. The fact that George couldn't get a hold of his wife or any of her friends concerned him,
so he decided to call the other women's husbands to see if they'd spoken with their wives. But the
news wasn't comforting. The other men revealed to George that they hadn't heard from their wives
either since the trio had left Chicago. At that point, the husbands decided each of them would
call the lodge back the following morning. Their collective concern for their wives only grew
stronger throughout Tuesday night because they learned from watching local weather reports
that the forecast for the greater Chicago area predicted a blinding snowstorm that was going to
descend on Starved Rock State Park that night.
On Wednesday morning, March 16th, after the snowstorm hit, Francis's husband called the lodge
to check on the women. But once again, none of the staff reported seeing them come or go from
their rooms. Shortly after that is when the workers for the hotel got into the women's quarters
and found that none of their beds appeared to have been slept in.
The sheets and linens were all freshly made, and none of the towels had been used,
and none of their luggage was unpacked.
All of those things indicated the three women had never stayed the first night in their rooms.
Staff then went outside and checked the lodge's parking lot
and found Francis's station wagon parked in a spot.
Her car was the vehicle that the three women had car pulled in from their homes,
and according to Steve Stout's reporting, it was covered in snow when it was found,
so almost like it hadn't been moved in days.
At that point, the women's husbands agreed
that after two days of not hearing from their wives,
something was definitely wrong,
and they alerted the local police.
According to the Daily Illini,
by midday on that Wednesday,
the LaSalle County Sheriff's Office
and the Illinois State Police
organized several search parties
to start walking the trails in Starved Rock State Park
to look for the missing women.
One group, which was made up of young men
from a nearby youth camp,
set out on the snow-covered trails in rocky terrain.
The weather conditions had deteriorated over the past two days,
so these searchers were having to plot over very narrow snow-covered trails
with sheets of ice and slippery rocks hidden underneath.
Shortly after launching the search parties,
the group of young men from the youth camp found all three women dead in the snow.
Their bodies were tucked a little ways into a cave
in an area of the park known as St. Louis Canyon,
about a half mile away from the starved rock lodge.
According to coverage by the daily Illini, the scene was gruesome.
The victim's skulls had all been bashed by some sort of large object,
and there were trails of blood on the ground and in the snow around their bodies.
They were each laying face up, and it was clear that their hands and feet had been bound
with some kind of twine.
The only major difference was that the binding around Francis' ankles had seemingly
come undone, which indicated that at some point she might have had the chance to run
away or attempted to run away. Not far from the bodies, searchers found the women's purses,
a broken camera, and a pair of binoculars with traces of blood on them. Right away, the Illinois
State Police were called in and began assessing the crime scene. The state police's chief,
William Morris, told reporters that he suspected it would have been very difficult for one person
to overtake all three women at the same time, especially if they'd put up a fight. He said
based on his initial observation of the crime scene, it was possible whoever had killed the
women might have been part of a group of perpetrators.
The state attorney for the region, a man named Harlan Warren, agreed and told news
reporters that he was convinced, based on the brutal nature of the murders, that more than
one person was involved.
He did speculate, though, that if it was one person, it was likely a man who was strong
enough to overpower three victims at once.
And just as a note here, Mildred, Lillian, and Francis were not for the person.
frail women by any means. They were middle-aged, average height, and maybe even on the taller
side, and would have been capable of fighting off an attacker if they needed to.
Anyway, immediately after their bodies were found, Chief Morris called investigators from
the Illinois Bureau of Investigation to help search the cave for clues and figure out if any of the
victims had been sexually assaulted. According to Life magazine's reporting, Mildred and Lillian
had their pants and underwear removed. Their clothing had also been torn in several places,
the killer or killers had placed their winter coats between their legs.
One of the victims also had a tuft of short hair clutched in her hand.
After making these observations, officers removed all three of the victim's bodies
and transported them to the nearby town of Ottawa for autopsies.
As I was researching the case, though, it appears the medical examiner
never formally ruled on whether any of the victims were sexually assaulted.
However, later coverage did state that none of the victims had been sexually assaulted.
I have to assume, and so did author Steve Stout, who wrote a book on this case called
The Star of Rock Murders, that sexual assault kit collection and technology at the time
just wasn't advanced enough to make that determination for certain in 1960.
But like I said, it appears a later study of that detail confirmed none of them had been
sexually assaulted.
One thing that was clear, though, at that time was that the killer had used something large,
like a club or some sort of blood object to inflict the victim's head injuries.
So investigators fanned out around the cave and looked for a potential murder weapon,
but finding any further clues like that was challenging because, like I mentioned earlier,
between Tuesday night and Wednesday morning,
eight inches of snow had fallen in the park and a lot of the area near the cave had been covered with snow.
So to get at what was beneath all that, investigators used brooms,
like actual straw brooms you'd store in your house to turn over the recent snow blanket.
And if that wasn't cringeworthy enough,
According to a news report featured in a documentary about this case,
investigators also used flamethrowers to melt some of the snow at the crime scene.
I know.
I have so many thoughts about their decision-making process there, but let's keep going.
I feel like this is exactly what crime scene tech classes nowadays would tell you not to do,
but again, this is 1960 and no one back then was really thinking about crime scene preservation or DNA or anything like that.
police officers continued to use these methods to cone through the snowdrifts, sweeping back and forth,
trying to uncover any additional evidence they believed could be related to the crime.
In one news report from that time, the anchor says that after burning up one section of snow,
investigators found a small piece of aluminum foil, which they concluded was the wrapping to a role of film.
The film itself, though, was no longer intact, likely meaning it had been burned away.
After a few hours of blow-torching and sweeping snow away like this, deputies located a three-foot
tree limb that had been buried beneath fresh snow.
It was frozen solid and had dried blood caked on one end.
They also found a long icicle from the cave that appeared to have traces of blood on it too.
At that point, investigators considered both of these items as potential murder weapons.
Back inside the cave where the women's bodies had been found, blood evidence investigated
saw there seemed to indicate that that was not the location where the women were initially
attacked. According to coverage by the Chicago Tribune, there was some blood found inside the cave
and on the walls, but not a lot. Certainly not the amount you'd expect to see if the cave
was the site where the women had been bludgeoned to death. So the lack of blood in the cave
told the state police that the killer may have murdered the women elsewhere, for example,
a clearing in the woods, then left them there and possibly returned later to drag the
their bodies into the cave to prevent someone else from finding them.
Feeling the pressure mounting to find a suspect, investigators tried to backtrack the
women's last-known movements.
Records from the lodge, as well as interviews with staff there, confirmed that right before
lunchtime on Monday, March 14th, the three victims had checked into the lodge and eaten
lunch together.
Then, shortly after 1 p.m., they were seen dressed appropriately for a hike and leaving
the lodge.
That was the last-known sighting of them before they were found two days.
later, dead in the park.
As you can imagine, the horrific nature of this crime sent people in the immediate area into
a panic, and there was palpable fear that a killer was on the loose, and could potentially
strike again.
Because of this, the state police's search for the suspect or suspects was ramped up significantly.
LaSalle County deputies set up roadblocks in and around the lodge and all the streets leading
to the state park.
They stopped everyone who came and went and asked them to be on the lookout for people, most
likely a man who may have a scratched face or injuries consistent with having been in a tussle
or fight. Naturally, authorities focused a lot of attention on the guests and employees at
Starved Rock Lodge. On the Thursday and Friday after the murders, detectives rounded up everyone
who worked there as well as park rangers from the area and asked them to take polygraphs. According to
news reports, most everyone did, and they all passed. Interestingly, though, during one of those
interviews, a worker told authorities a strange and interesting story about a 21-year-old
dishwasher from the lodge named Chester Weiger, who'd shown up to work on March 15th with
some scratches on his face that appeared to be fresh. Now, this information obviously got the
police's attention, and so they quickly got a hold of Chester for an interview. According to news
reports, Chester told the police that he'd accidentally cut himself shaving before coming to work
on the 15th, and that's why he had that noticeable gash on his chin.
He told the police that during the time frame of the murders,
he was in the basement of the lodge stoking a coal furnace and writing letters.
Now, authorities had no reason to suspect Chester was lying to them at that point
because they had no tangible proof he was involved.
Well, not really.
According to an article in Life magazine,
they did notice a large dark stain on his leather jacket
that they thought looked a whole lot like blood.
When they asked Chester for the jacket, he gave it to them,
and investigators quickly sent it off for his jacket.
testing. A few days later, the state lab determined the blood was animal blood, so not human.
At that point, detectives pretty much stopped looking at Chester as a suspect and moved on with
their investigation. After that, state police decided to cool it with the interviews and polygraphs
for a bit and turn their attention to the physical evidence they'd collected from the crime
scene. One item they suspected was going to be important was Lillian's camera. You know, the one that had
been left severely damaged and partially buried in the snow. The strap on the device was completely
broken, which made authority suspect it had likely been ripped away from her, causing the
strap to snap in the process. According to Steve Stouts reporting, Lillian's camera was an Argus
C-3, which at the time was known to take good quality pictures. Whenever a photo was taken on that
particular device, the operator had to manually wind a knob on the top of it to advance the film
roll to the next available frame.
But oftentimes, if you didn't twist the knob all the way, frames of film would overlap on one another.
This usually resulted in what authorities eventually referred to as a triple exposure.
When officers processed the film from Lillian's camera, they realized that the women had taken several pictures throughout their hike.
Most of the images showed them bundled up posing in front of overlooks in huge rocks or waterfalls.
But authorities noted that the last picture on the role was a triple exposure.
meaning Lillian didn't twist the knob on the top of the camera all the way before snapping the photo.
The picture showed Francis and Mildred standing in front of a frozen waterfall with trees in the background and lots of snow piled around them.
That image was overlaid onto another frame of film, so it looked kind of ghostly and unnatural.
Both the state police and the LaSalle County Sheriff's Office thought the triple exposure showed the faint outline of a man's face and a shadow between the rock face of St. Louis Canyon and a tree trunk behind.
where Mildred was standing.
Investigators knew that the location where the women had posed was only a few steps away
from the cave where their bodies were eventually found.
So the prevailing theory was most likely Lillian had snapped the picture right before the
victim's assailant or assailants had struck.
Detectives spent hours and even days analyzing the photo trying to figure out if in fact
the women had inadvertently taken a picture of their own killer who was lurking in the
shadows near them. Some investigators were convinced the image clearly showed a man was present,
while others just thought the ghostly image was a byproduct of the accidental triple exposure.
According to Steve Stout's reporting, in the end, authorities ruled out the theory that the women
had photographed their killer, but that didn't stop publications at the time from running
full steam ahead with that angle of the story. Life magazine published a several-page article
that detailed how it was possible the women had captured a haunting glimpse of their kill.
just moments before being brutally murdered.
Two other clues police followed up on
included a case for a set of keys found on the trail
leading to the cave
and a reported sighting of a gray station wagon
seen in the area where the women entered the park
shortly before they were suspected of being killed.
But with little other information to go on
about those two things, the leads fizzled out.
March dragged on and the families of the victims
grew frustrated that police had no suspects in the case.
According to archive news footage in Hunter Cox's documentary on this case,
a man named Virgil Peterson who worked for the Chicago Crime Commission
and was close friends with all three victims' families,
criticized the LaSalle County Sheriff's Office
for not organizing a search sooner for the women.
He told reporters it was outrageous that two days had passed
with no sign of the trio before any effort was made to find them.
He said that when multiple attempts by the victim's husbands on Monday and Tuesday
to get in touch with their wives went on.
answered, that should have been a red flag to everyone that something horrible had happened.
He also criticized the fact that there was no protection or police presence in the park to help deter a
crime like this from happening. The criticism, though harsh, was understandable because law
enforcement had worked the case for several weeks and interviewed more than 250 people,
but still, they were no closer to catching a killer or killers. With tensions growing to see
some kind of progress, the companies that employed the three women's husbands,
landed together and offered up a $30,000 reward for information,
which back in 1960 was a substantial chunk of change considering inflation.
By the end of March, state attorney Harland Warren, state police chief William Morris,
and the LaSalle County Sheriff's Office asked Illinois legislators for more money to fund the investigation,
but that request was denied.
According to Hunter Cox's documentary on the case,
the total man-hours put into solving the murders up until that point was totaling close to 22,000 hours.
The mounting cost to pay for those efforts was nearing $65,000,
which again, keeping in mind the era this happened in
was a significant amount of money.
So with funds drying up, the case slowly turned cold.
A few months later in July, an interesting thing happened, though,
that you almost never see in homicide investigations.
The state attorney decided he was going to launch his own personal investigation into the case,
which is unusual, even by today.
standards. State attorneys are essentially like district attorneys. Typically, they're not the detectives
or investigators who try to solve crimes. They're the legal officers in charge of assessing what
police have to investigate, and then it's their job to figure out if a case has enough legs to go to
trial. State attorneys file charges against a suspect on behalf of the state and move forward
with prosecution. They're not supposed to play the role of detective themselves. But in this case,
Harland Warren did exactly that. And he ruffled a few feathers.
in the process, particularly with the Illinois State Police.
According to Steve Stouts reporting, not long after launching his personal investigation,
which was Harlan's pretty clear way of saying he didn't think the state police were doing a good
enough job.
Someone threw a rock through a window at his home.
So it was clear that not only were law enforcement investigators not making any progress
finding a suspect, they were now in an escalating battle of egos with the state attorney
who was criticizing their lack of progress.
As part of Harlan's effort, he called for all the evidence in the case to be returned to his office in Ottawa, which was the LaSalle County seat.
And for several weeks, he and two deputies reviewed all the pictures and evidence from the investigation.
Out of all the items they reviewed, which included the broken camera, the frozen tree limb, the broken binoculars, and all the bloody clothing taken from the crime scene, there was one thing the group identified as uniquely important.
The twine, which had been used to bind the victim's hands and feet.
That was not an item authority suspected the women already had brought with them when they entered the park.
It was something the killer had seemingly packed themselves to restrain the victims.
So, naturally, Harland asked the big question anyone would, which was, where did the twine come from?
In September of 1960, he and the two deputies who were helping him refocused their investigation to try and answer that question.
They set their sights once again on the employees of the Starved Rock Lodge.
They spoke with the building's manager, and he told them there was a ball of twine that stayed stored in the kitchen's pantry because the cooks would sometimes use it to tie up large chunks of meat before putting them in the freezer.
When investigators got a hold of that twine and compared it to the string that had been found on the women's bodies, they confirmed it was a match.
That's also when they realized there was one lodge employee whom they'd previously spoken with who would have had access to that twine.
Chester Weiger.
After that, investigators revisited Chester as a potential person of interest, and again brought him in for questioning.
After his first interview, they'd learned he'd quit his job at the lodge not long after the murders and begun working as a house painter for a family member.
During his second sit-down with police, investigators asked him to take a polygraph.
And according to news coverage from that time, Chester reportedly failed all of them.
Despite police in Illinois being super suspicious of Chester,
they didn't really have any physical evidence that amounted to probable cause to keep him in custody.
So once again, authorities had no other choice but to let him walk.
For the entire month of October, police kept him under close watch, though.
24 hours a day they had a surveillance team tail him,
watching his every move as he went to and from work
and lived with his wife, Joanne, and their two small children.
Investigators suspected on many occasions
that the former Marine was toying with them,
leading them into the woods and on unplanned hunting trips
and making officers chase him through bars
as he ran in circles between alleyways and buildings.
While they surveilled him,
they also began researching other violent crimes in the area
that they speculated he might be connected to.
Authorities discovered that in the fall of 1959,
so roughly six months prior to the Starved Rock murders,
two high school seniors on a date in nearby Matheson State Park
had been robbed at gunpoint while getting into their car.
In that case, the couple reported to authorities
that they'd been tied up by a man who was wielding a rifle
and hiding in the shadows of a trailhead parking lot.
Their assailant robbed the young man and sexually assaulted the young woman.
Steve Stout reported that when those victims first went to LaSalle County Sheriff's Office
to report their attack, deputies didn't want to.
believe them and dismiss their story as made up.
Well, fast forward to the fall of 1960, and authorities revisited those two victims and showed
the mistsack of pictures of various men, which included a photo of Chester Weeger.
According to the coverage, the female victim screamed at the sight of Chester's picture
and positively identified him as the man who she said had sexually assaulted her and robbed her
partner. Immediately after that, on November 16, 1960, police used the woman's positive idea of
Chester to arrest him for that sexual assault and robbery incident. That was essentially
authority's way of getting him into custody while they continued to investigate him for
Lillian Francis and Mildred's murders. According to the Starved Rock Murder's documentary, when police
brought Chester in for the 1959 assault and robbery and proceeded to interrogate him during
the early morning hours of November 17th, he eventually could.
confessed to the triple murder of the housewives in Starved Rock State Park.
His confession only came, though, after about eight hours of intense questioning by police,
who reportedly at one point suggested he would be executed via the electric tear, and that
his wife would cheat on him if he went to prison.
Also during this interrogation, police allowed Chester's parents, wife and kids, two court
reporters, a medical doctor, and several other non-law enforcement personnel to come into the
room.
According to the documentary on this case, after being pressed for hours about where he'd been
on March 14th and what he'd done, Chester had started sobbing uncontrollably and sighed and
made the utterance, quote, all right, I did it, end quote.
The day after he confessed, Chester volunteered to take the state police to St. Louis Canyon and
walked them through how he'd committed the crime.
Eager to show the public that they'd managed to arrest a prime suspect in the case, the state
police alerted roughly 20 newspaper and radio reporters about this field trip. And with a crowd of
journalists and police following him, Chester sobbed and whispered as he walked everyone through
how he'd killed the women. His story at that point in time was that on the day Lillian, Francis and
Mildred entered the park, he'd been on a mission to rob someone. When he saw them near St. Louis
Canyon, he attempted to snatch one of their purses. But when he'd grabbed what he thought was a
purse strap on Francis's shoulder, it broke, and he realized it was actually the strap
to her camera. At that point, the women were frightened, and Chester became worried that he would get
caught. So he begged the women to go further into the canyon and give him time to escape.
He said the women were shaken up, but agreed to his request. The trio then quickly walked away
from him in the direction of a rock formation deeper into the canyon. But after that, Chester
said he decided to continue stalking the women because he was determined to rob them. He said
Near the end of the canyon, next to a cave, he jumped out of the woods and threatened them
with a large tree limb and herded them into the cavern.
He said he then tied them up with the twine he'd stolen from the kitchen at the Star of Rock Lodge.
He said he originally planned to just leave them tied up in the cave, but as he was departing,
Francis broke free from her bindings and ran after him holding a pair of binoculars.
He said she attempted to strike him on the back of the head with them, but they broke.
Chester said during that tussle he picked up the tree limb he'd used.
to corral the women into the cave and struck Francis on the back of her neck.
After that, he dragged her body back into the mouth of the cave where he'd left Mildred and Lillian.
Except when he saw them, he realized, just like Francis, they'd managed to get out of their
bindings. And they too came after him and began trying to claw at his face.
He said at that point he realized the situation was out of his control and he couldn't leave any of
them alive. After bludgeoning each of them to death with the tree limb, he checked their pulses to
ensure that they were dead. Then dragged their bodies further into the cave to conceal them from
a red and white airplane he said had been flying above the park. Police later followed up on that
detail about the plane and confirmed that a pilot flying a red and white airplane out of a nearby
airport had been cruising over St. Louis Canyon on the afternoon of March 14th. So that much
of Chester's story checked out. As far as some of the victims' state of disarray went, Chester said
he'd partially undressed Mildred and Lillian to make the scene appear as if a sexual predator
had committed the murders, you know, to throw off the police. After the crime, he said he
washed his hands with a scoop of fresh snow and hightailed it back to the lodge for his dishwashing
shift at 5 o'clock. The Chicago Tribune pointed out in an article published after Chester's
confession that none of the three victims' expensive jewelry, rings, or purses had been taken
after they were murdered. When police asked Chester to explain why he hadn't robbed the women, if
robbery was supposedly his sole motive, he didn't have an answer. He only replied, quote,
it all started with robbery, but I don't know what I needed the money for, end quote.
On November 18, 1960, a grand jury in LaSalle County indicted Chester for three counts of first-degree
murder and eight other felonies related to the 1959 sexual assault and robbery of the high school
couple in Matheson State Park. Some of those felonies were also for a purse-snatching incident
from another state park and the molestation of a woman.
By the time Chester went to trial in February 1961, though, for a Lillian's murder,
his public defender claimed his confession and his reenactment in the park were coerced.
Later reporting states that Chester had actually recanted his confession just two days after giving it.
His lawyer at trial maintained that Chester was innocent and that police had bungled the investigation
from the very beginning.
The defense claimed the state had been prejudiced against Chester throughout,
much of 1960, and on top of that, prosecutors had no credible physical evidence tying him to
the crime. But despite the defense fighting hard to keep Chester's confession out, the prosecution
successfully won a motion to allow it in as evidence. According to reporting by the Daily
Ilyne, the one victory Chester's attorney managed to score was getting a motion granted that
ensured jurors would only see a select number of crime scene images. During the trial, the judge only
allowed prosecutors to show the jury one photo of the victims in the cave. But that was it.
The defense had successfully argued that the photos in their totality were, quote, inflammatory
and would prejudice the jury against the defendant, end quote. Overall, it was hard, though,
for Chester and his lawyer to combat the state's case when it came down to forensic evidence.
And that's because the two deputies who'd helped former state attorney Harland Warren build the
case against him had uncovered something very important.
about the twine used to bind the victims.
With the help of a manufacturer, LaSalle County deputies determined that the twine from the
Starved Rock Lodge's kitchen that the cook would use to secure meat was a very close match
to the twine used to bind Francis, Mildren, and Lillian.
It was explained at trial that the twine had a distinct twenty-saint.
strand weave pattern and reportedly wasn't made often or sold in a lot of places.
So there was no denying. The twine from the Lodge's kitchen was critical to the state's
theory about Chester. In addition to that, prosecutors also believe Chester's leather jacket was a
crucial piece of evidence that connected him to the crime. At trial, prosecutors explained that
the state lab, which performed the initial testing on the jacket, had made an error when it
identified the bloodstain as belonging to an animal. Since then, investigators,
had sent the jacket to the FBI's lab in Washington.
And those results concluded the stain on the jacket could be human blood.
There was a bit of a catch, though,
because the FBI's experts couldn't necessarily totally rule out animal blood
due to the tanning process used to make the leather.
The FBI agent who testified at the trial said it appeared
someone had tried very hard to wash the stain
to remove whatever blood had soaked into it.
To try and win jurors over, Chester took the stand in his own defense.
For three hours, the state attorney grilled him about the case,
but he maintained his innocence and claimed the deputies from LaSalle County
had threatened him into confessing to something he didn't do.
After five long weeks of trial, both sides rested their cases
and jurors deliberated for nearly 10 hours.
According to the coverage, on Friday, March 3, 1961,
they found Chester guilty of Lillian's murder,
and a few weeks later in April, he was sentenced to life in prison.
According to Illinois law at the time, Chester was eligible for parole after serving 20 years of that sentence.
He quickly appealed his conviction and asked for a new trial, but he still had two more murder trials to get through for Francis and Mildred's deaths.
Interestingly, though, in his appeal after being convicted of Lillian's murder, a juror co-signed an affidavit and suggested that LaSalle County deputies had pressured the jury into finding Chester guilty.
Despite this, though, in 1962, the Illinois Supreme Court upheld Chester's conviction
and denied his request for a new trial.
A year later, in February 1963, LaSalle County was forced to drop all charges against him
for the 1959 sexual assault and robbery in Matheson State Park
because the speedy trial clock to prosecute him for those crimes had run out,
and by law, he could not be tried for that incident.
In April of 1963, a new state attorney in LaSalle County
dropped the remaining murder indictments against him for Francis and Mildred's murders.
He told the Chicago Tribune that he'd made the decision
because there was reluctance from the Illinois State Legislature
to impose the death penalty.
Basically, if Chester had been convicted of Francis and Mildred's murders,
he would have received the same life sentence that he got for Lillian's murder.
Those sentences would be served concurrently,
meaning he would still have been able to apply for parole
after serving only 20 years.
Because the state attorney couldn't guarantee a jury would put,
put Chester to death, he didn't see the point in moving forward, and so he just bailed entirely
on taking the remaining murder cases to trial.
He told news reporters, though, that despite this, he would do everything in his power to make
sure Chester was never released from prison early.
After that, Chester penned a 48-page memoir in prison and gave it to the Chicago Tribune.
In it, he claimed he was framed for the Stardrock murders and explained in detail how the
authorities had coerced him into falsely confessing.
When reporters asked him about some of his previous convictions for sexual assault and theft prior to 1960,
he claimed police involved in those investigations had tricked him into falsely confessing as well.
For decades, every time Chester applied for parole, the state of Illinois denied his request.
But then, in 2004, more than 40 years after his conviction, a group of post-conviction attorneys attempted to have new DNA testing done on items of evidence in the case.
They hope that advancements in DNA technology might prove the blood on Chester's jacket
and the hair that had been found clutched in one of the victim's hands
would rule him out as being involved.
But unfortunately, by that point, Lassau County had allowed school groups, civic clubs,
and journalists to handle and examine key pieces of evidence in the case while it was in storage.
So a lot of the items had been contaminated.
Chester's friends and family who'd always believed he was innocent were disappointed
when the judge ruled against having new testing done because of that.
However, as you can imagine, descendants of Lillian, Mildred, and Francis
were relieved to know they wouldn't have to relive any more legal proceedings related to the case.
In 2007, 2016, and 2018, Chester again applied for early release, but was denied.
Then, in November 2019, he was paroled, and a few months later, in February 2020, he walked out of prison.
He immediately set his sights on.
on clearing his name and had some brand new help in his corner.
According to coverage by WPLO, the Chicago Sun Times, and WSpy, by 2023, an attorney named
Andrew Hale who'd taken up the case and done his own investigation, wrote a letter to a special
prosecutor claiming that a brown hair that had been found on the left index finger of Francis
Murphy's wool glove was not Chester Weigers or any of the victims.
Turns out further forensic testing of the hair's root and bulb revealed
it belonged to one of three brothers who all since passed away. But back when the crime occurred,
one of them lived near the crime scene in Starved Rock State Park. How this hair got in the index
finger of Francis's glove was a question the defense very much set out to answer. And it really was
this new bit of information about the hair DNA that seemed to garner a lot of renewed interest in the
story. A few years prior, Andrew Hale had launched his own podcast about the murders titled The Starved Rock
Murders podcast, where he chronicled his investigation into the crime and a lot of the nuanced
legal issues involved in Chester's interrogation, prosecution, and post-conviction claims.
There was also increased activity on a Facebook page that had been around for a few years
called Friends of Chester Weeger, which was a place a lot of his supporters would post.
In 2024, Chester's supervised release was lifted, and his defense team quickly filed a request
in LaSalle County to have what they suggested were several critical
pieces of physical evidence tested with modern technologies and methods.
Those items included signatures on Chester's confession, a piece of wood believed to have
belonged to the murder weapon, a lock of curly hair, and a piece of fuzz.
But the judge presiding over the case at that point only agreed to let a private lab test
the piece of wood because, in his opinion, it was the most interesting item of evidence.
Andrew Hale believed that a fragment of that wood that had been found embedded in Lillian's head
had actually come from some kind of blunt object like a wooden baseball bat,
and not the frozen tree limb which Chester had previously confessed to wielding during the attack.
Hale emphasized to the press that if a microscopic examination of the piece of wood
revealed it had varnish on it or any other type of treatment,
that could prove Chester was not guilty of the crime
and his previous confession was in fact false.
The catch with all this, though, was that the defense was going to have to front the bill
to pay for the testing, not the state.
The Wood had to be delivered to the lab by sheriff's deputies, not anyone else.
By mid-May 2025, everything in the case came to a head when an evidentiary hearing was
held to evaluate Chester's post-conviction claims.
Andrew Hale argued for the defense that the newly discovered evidence he and his team had
uncovered was so powerfully exculpatory, jurors in a new trial likely wouldn't be able
to convict Chester beyond a reasonable doubt.
A special prosecutor for the state saw things very differently, though.
She told the court that most of what defense attorney Hale and his team plan to present
would probably be considered inadmissible in a new trial.
Among the many things that were explored during the evidentiary hearing was testimony
from a forensic pathologist who'd reviewed the three victims' autopsies.
This guy testified that it was possible the women had been bludgeoned with the camera and broken
and binoculars, but blows from those items would not have been what killed them.
He said the victim's fatal injuries likely came from some type of a hard, heavy, strong,
curved object, similar to a bat, metal pipe, or possibly a crowbar.
In his expert opinion, he didn't think a frozen log or tree limb could have been the murder
weapon.
Andrew Hale told the court that witnesses for the defense would testify that Lillian, Francis,
and Mildred's murders were not the result of a botched robbery attempt, but instead,
a mob hit, orchestrated by members of the Chicago Mafia.
Testimony the defense presented to back up that theory
came from a woman who claimed her grandfather had given a deathbed confession,
stating he orchestrated the women's murders for the mob.
According to coverage by WLPO and Shaw Local,
the woman testified that right before her grandfather passed away from cancer,
he'd confided in her that he knew for a fact
Chester Weeger was innocent of the Starved Rock murders,
because he'd been the person responsible for organizing the hit.
But the defense was never able to make a clear connection between that claim
and the trio of brothers who the haired DNA had been linked to
because those men's bodies were never exhumed for direct comparison.
The prosecution's rebuttal to this theory was a witness
who was the older sister of a guy who claimed he'd carried out the murders
with some of his friends for $25,000.
And that man just so happened to be an associate of Chester Weegers at the time of the crime.
There were also a few witnesses who testified they overheard former investigators on the case
state that Chester might be innocent or had been wrongfully convicted.
But none of those witnesses knew that knowledge firsthand.
It was declarations they overheard in conversations throughout the years.
So, yeah, there was a lot of what would be considered hearsay flying around at this evidentiary hearing.
When the proceeding finally ended, the judge ultimately decided the defense had not made a convincing
enough argument to prove Chester's innocence. His main reasons for denying Chester's request for a new
trial was because he concluded the new DNA evidence was insufficient and nearly all of the
hearsay testimony the defense had presented was unreliable. No witnesses had been presented
who'd been present for the murders or could talk about specific details of the crime. A few days after,
in court, Chester, who was in his mid-80s, passed away. Until his dying day, he maintained his
innocence. Whether or not you believe him is something you'll have to decide for yourself.
Did he commit this heinous triple murder, or did someone else pull off the perfect crime?
It appears only the woods and canyons of Starved Rock State Park hold the answers.
Park Predators is an audio chucked.
production. You can view a list of all the source material for this episode on our website,
parkpreditors.com. And you can also follow Park Predators on Instagram, at Park Predators.
I think Chuck would approve.
